// Mgmt
// Copyright (C) James Shubin and the project contributors
// Written by James Shubin <james@shubin.ca> and the project contributors
//
// This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
// it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
// the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
// (at your option) any later version.
//
// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
// GNU General Public License for more details.
//
// You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
// along with this program.  If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
//
// Additional permission under GNU GPL version 3 section 7
//
// If you modify this program, or any covered work, by linking or combining it
// with embedded mcl code and modules (and that the embedded mcl code and
// modules which link with this program, contain a copy of their source code in
// the authoritative form) containing parts covered by the terms of any other
// license, the licensors of this program grant you additional permission to
// convey the resulting work. Furthermore, the licensors of this program grant
// the original author, James Shubin, additional permission to update this
// additional permission if he deems it necessary to achieve the goals of this
// additional permission.

package structs

import (
	"context"
	"fmt"

	"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/lang/interfaces"
	"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/lang/types"
	"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/lang/types/full"
	"github.com/purpleidea/mgmt/util/errwrap"
)

const (
	// CallFuncName is the unique name identifier for this function.
	CallFuncName = "call"

	// CallFuncArgNameFunction is the name for the edge which connects the
	// input function to CallFunc.
	CallFuncArgNameFunction = "fn"
)

// CallFunc receives a function from upstream, but not the arguments. Instead,
// the Funcs which emit those arguments must be specified at construction time.
// The arguments are connected to the received FuncValues in such a way that
// CallFunc emits the result of applying the function to the arguments.
type CallFunc struct {
	interfaces.Textarea

	Type     *types.Type // the type of the result of applying the function
	FuncType *types.Type // the type of the function
	EdgeName string      // name of the edge used

	// These two fields are identical to what is used by a ShapelyFunc.
	// TODO: Consider just using that interface here instead?
	ArgVertices  []interfaces.Func
	OutputVertex interfaces.Func

	init *interfaces.Init

	lastFuncValue *full.FuncValue // remember the last function value
}

// String returns a simple name for this function. This is needed so this struct
// can satisfy the pgraph.Vertex interface.
func (obj *CallFunc) String() string {
	return CallFuncName
}

// Validate makes sure we've built our struct properly.
func (obj *CallFunc) Validate() error {
	if obj.Type == nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("must specify a type")
	}
	if obj.FuncType == nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("must specify a func type")
	}
	// TODO: maybe we can remove this if we use this for core functions...
	if obj.EdgeName == "" {
		return fmt.Errorf("must specify an edge name")
	}
	typ := obj.FuncType
	// we only care about the output type of calling our func
	if err := obj.Type.Cmp(typ.Out); err != nil {
		return errwrap.Wrapf(err, "call expr type must match func out type")
	}
	if len(obj.ArgVertices) != len(typ.Ord) {
		return fmt.Errorf("number of arg Funcs must match number of func args in the type")
	}

	if obj.OutputVertex == nil {
		return fmt.Errorf("the output vertex is missing")
	}

	return nil
}

// Info returns some static info about itself.
func (obj *CallFunc) Info() *interfaces.Info {
	var typ *types.Type
	if obj.Type != nil && obj.FuncType != nil { // don't panic if called speculatively
		typ = types.NewType(fmt.Sprintf("func(%s %s) %s", obj.EdgeName, obj.FuncType, obj.Type))
	}

	return &interfaces.Info{
		Pure: false, // TODO: ???
		Memo: false,
		Fast: false,
		Spec: false,
		Sig:  typ,
		Err:  obj.Validate(),
	}
}

// Init runs some startup code for this composite function.
func (obj *CallFunc) Init(init *interfaces.Init) error {
	obj.init = init
	obj.lastFuncValue = nil
	return nil
}

func (obj *CallFunc) replaceSubGraph(newFuncValue *full.FuncValue) error {
	// Create a subgraph which looks as follows.
	//
	// digraph {
	//   ArgVertices[0] -> "fn" # spawned
	//   ArgVertices[1] -> "fn" # spawned
	//   ArgVertices[2] -> "fn" # spawned
	//
	//   "fn" -> "callSubgraphOutput" # spawned
	//
	//   "FuncValue" -> "CallFunc" # fn
	//   "CallFunc" -> "callSubgraphOutput" # dummy
	//   "callSubgraphOutput" -> downstream
	// }

	// delete the old subgraph
	if err := obj.init.Txn.Reverse(); err != nil {
		return errwrap.Wrapf(err, "could not Reverse")
	}

	// This passed in Txn has AddVertex, AddEdge, and possibly AddGraph
	// methods called on it. Nothing else. It will _not_ call Commit or
	// Reverse. It adds to the graph, and our Commit and Reverse operations
	// are the ones that actually make the change.
	outputFunc, err := newFuncValue.CallWithFuncs(obj.init.Txn, obj.ArgVertices, obj.OutputVertex)
	if err != nil {
		return errwrap.Wrapf(err, "could not call newFuncValue.Call()")
	}

	// create the new subgraph
	edge := &interfaces.FuncEdge{Args: []string{OutputFuncArgName}} // "out"
	obj.init.Txn.AddVertex(outputFunc)

	// XXX: We don't want to do this for ShapelyFunc's. This is a hack b/c I
	// wasn't sure how to make this more consistent elsewhere. Look at the
	// "hack" edge in iter.map and iter.filter as those need this hack.
	// XXX: maybe this interface could return the funcSubgraphOutput node?
	if _, ok := outputFunc.(interfaces.ShapelyFunc); !ok {
		obj.init.Txn.AddEdge(outputFunc, obj.OutputVertex, edge)
	}

	return obj.init.Txn.Commit()
}

// Call this function with the input args and return the value if it is possible
// to do so at this time.
func (obj *CallFunc) Call(ctx context.Context, args []types.Value) (types.Value, error) {
	if len(args) < 1 {
		return nil, fmt.Errorf("not enough args")
	}
	value := args[0]

	newFuncValue, ok := value.(*full.FuncValue)
	if !ok {
		return nil, fmt.Errorf("programming error, can't convert to *FuncValue")
	}

	if newFuncValue != obj.lastFuncValue {
		// If we have a new function, then we need to replace the
		// subgraph with a new one that uses the new function.
		obj.lastFuncValue = newFuncValue

		// This does *not* deadlock, because running a Txn, can't cause
		// a second Txn to run automatically. What can happen following
		// this replacement and subsequent Txn execution, is that we'll
		// run the interrupt which then lets the new Call functions run
		// and they then can call more Txn exections and so on...
		if err := obj.replaceSubGraph(newFuncValue); err != nil {
			return nil, errwrap.Wrapf(err, "could not replace subgraph")
		}

		return nil, interfaces.ErrInterrupt
	}

	// send dummy value to the output
	return types.NewNil(), nil // dummy value
}

// Cleanup runs after that function was removed from the graph.
func (obj *CallFunc) Cleanup(ctx context.Context) error {
	return obj.init.Txn.Reverse()
}
